leanderbuzz
Monday, November 24, 2025
Contact Us
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Austin
  • Texas
No Result
View All Result
LeanderBuzz
No Result
View All Result

In Dallas, Churches Break the Law to Shelter Homeless People on Freezing Nights

December 17, 2019
in Texas
3 min read
In Dallas, Churches Break the Law to Shelter Homeless People on Freezing Nights

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

Loon Star State: Trump’s Derangement Syndrome

East Texas Locals Fight to Stop an Unnecessary Reservoir

Tents in a former homeless camp under Interstate 45 in Dallas in 2016. Patrick Michels

The first night of a punishing cold front in January 2018, two people living on the streets of South Dallas died. Others camping underneath the same highway overpass as Jesse Johnson Jr., 69, remembered him as a nice guy who mostly kept to himself. Less than a mile away, a man found Donna Bannister, 58, near her wheelchair on the floor of a bus stop shelter; he told WFAA it appeared she had “frozen to death.”

Rachel Baughman, senior pastor at Oak Lawn United Methodist Church in Dallas, recalled the news as “one of those situations that hits you in the face.” Bannister and Johnson both died within a block of a church.

For the past three years, Baughman has opened her church’s doors on nights when temperatures could be fatally cold—and she’s tried to team up with other faith leaders to build a broader “pop-up” network. But she’s faced a persistent roadblock: In Dallas, it’s against the law. Chapter 51A of the Dallas Development Code bans overnight shelters within 1,000 feet of a church, school, park, or other entity, preventing places of worship and virtually anyone else from offering aid.

“There’s just no room in the code right now for an emergency like this. People are dying, people are freezing.”

Still, some churches choose to take a risk. Wayne Walker, executive director of homeless resource and outreach center OurCalling, says some churches and organizations provide shelter “under the radar” to avoid trouble. On a cold night in February 2018, a month after Bannister and Johnson died, Walker received a code violation for keeping his center open for people without shelter. He hung the letter on the wall in his office.

“There’s just no room in the code right now for an emergency like this,” Walker told the Observer. “People are dying, people are freezing.”

According to Baughman and Walker, there is a rising need for emergency shelter during inclement weather in Dallas, which hasn’t built new shelter beds in over a decade despite a growing homeless population. While city council failed to reform the development code or create an emergency shelter plan in time for winter, officials opened the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center to shelter homeless people on cold nights for the first time last month. The city has kept the convention center open as a shelter for six nights so far. On Friday, the city lowered the threshold temperature for the shelter to operate from 36 to 32 degrees.

According to Monica Hardman, director of Dallas’ Office of Homeless Solutions, the city is working on a long-term emergency shelter plan that would include participation from churches. She says a city commission is scheduled to consider changes to the development code early next year. “What we’ve been doing since November is really just a stop-gap plan,” she says.

Baughman says that, under the current code, the very real possibility of annoyed neighbors reporting churches has kept some congregations from taking in homeless people. But last winter, Baughman’s church opened its doors a total of 22 nights to provide hot meals and a warm place to sleep for people with nowhere else to go. This winter, the church has already opened as a shelter seven different times, once more than the city convention center. Even when the convention center is open, Baughman says, about 100 people show up to sleep on cots inside the church sanctuary and classrooms.

“A citywide emergency plan is what’s truly needed,” Baughman told the Observer last week as she once again prepared to convert the church into a nighttime shelter. “We’re doing the best we can, but it’s not enough.”

Read more from the Observer:

Credit: Source link

ShareTweet
Previous Post

Why a Small Offense Shouldn’t Have Life-Altering Consequence

Next Post

National Dems Back MJ Hegar, Underscoring a Deeper Debate: How to Win in Texas

Related Posts

Loon Star State: Trump’s Derangement Syndrome
Texas

Loon Star State: Trump’s Derangement Syndrome

November 21, 2025
East Texas Locals Fight to Stop an Unnecessary Reservoir
Texas

East Texas Locals Fight to Stop an Unnecessary Reservoir

November 20, 2025
Dallas’ Evidence Fiasco: An Exoneree’s Lawyer Speaks
Texas

New Report Highlights the “Fatal Flaws” Behind Wrongful Capital Convictions

November 19, 2025
The High Cost of Targeting International Students in Texas
Texas

The High Cost of Targeting International Students in Texas

November 18, 2025

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

No Result
View All Result

Recent News

How often does Austin freeze? Here's a breakdown by date, month, year and decade

How often does Austin freeze? Here's a breakdown by date, month, year and decade

November 24, 2025
Central Texas Food Bank, Austin Pets Alive! team up for Thanksgiving food drive

Central Texas Food Bank, Austin Pets Alive! team up for Thanksgiving food drive

November 24, 2025
Police searching for suspect after 1 shot in downtown Round Rock

1 dead, 1 charged with intoxication manslaughter after crash involving Oncor workers

November 24, 2025
LeanderBuzz

LeanderBuzz.com is an online news portal which aims to share latest trendy news from USA especially northern Austin, Leander Texas Feel free to get in touch with us!

Recent News

  • How often does Austin freeze? Here's a breakdown by date, month, year and decade
  • Central Texas Food Bank, Austin Pets Alive! team up for Thanksgiving food drive
  • 1 dead, 1 charged with intoxication manslaughter after crash involving Oncor workers

Subscribe NOW

  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

© 2019 LeanderBuzz.com - All rights reserved!

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Austin
  • Texas

© 2019 LeanderBuzz.com - All rights reserved!